Journal Articles

Rice, S. and J. Newman. 2018. A corpus investigation of English cognition verbs and their effect on the incipient epistemization of physical activity verbs. Russian Journal of
Linguistics 22.3: 560-580.

Newman, J. 2010. Balancing acts: Empirical pursuits in cognitive linguistics. In Dylan Glynn and Kerstin Fischer (eds.), Quantitative Methods in
Cognitive Semantics, pp. 79-100. Berlin and New York: Mouton de Gruyter. A pre-publication version of the paper is available here.

Newman, J. and S. Rice. 2008. Asymmetry in English multi-verb sequences: A corpus-based approach. In Barbara Lewandowska-Tomaszczyk (ed.), Asymmetric Events: An Interpretation, pp.
3-22. Amsterdam and New York: John Benjamins. Pre-publication version available here.

Newman, J. and S. Rice. 2006. Transitivity schemas of English EAT and DRINK in the BNC. In S. Th. Gries & A. Stefanowitsch (eds.), Corpora in Cognitive Linguistics: Corpus-based
Approaches to Syntax and Lexis, 225-260. Berlin and New York: Mouton de Gruyter. Pre-publication version available here.

Newman, J. and T. Yamaguchi. 2002. Action and state interpretations of 'sit' in Japanese and English. In John Newman (ed.), The Linguistics of Sitting, Standing, and Lying, 43-59.
Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins.

Newman, J. 2002. A cross-linguistic overview of the posture verb 'sit', 'stand', and'lie'. In John Newman (ed.), The Linguistics of Sitting, Standing, and Lying, 1-24. Amsterdam and
Philadelphia: John Benjamins.

Newman, J. 1996. Footnotes to a history of Cantonese: accounting for the phonological irregularities. In Mark Durie and Malcolm Ross (eds.), The Comparative Method Reviewed: Regularity
and Irregularity in Language Change, 90-111. New York: Oxford University Press.

Newman, J. 1994. The history of Wenzhou [y]. In Matthew Chen and Ovid Tzeng (eds.), In Honor of William S-Y. Wang, 333-348. Taipeh: Pyramid Press.

Newman, J. 1993. The semantics of giving in Mandarin. In R. Geier and B. Rudzka-Ostyn(eds.), Conceptualizations and Mental Processing in Language, 433-485. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.